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Search results for: walking

From Dog Clickers to Scripts—Thoughts on Learning to Teach

Philip Seo, MD, MHS  |  August 16, 2018

You can purchase a dog clicker for about $3 on Amazon. If you don’t own a dog, this is not a useful piece of information. I don’t own a dog, and the first time I heard the phrase dog clicker, I thought—I think understandably—that it was some sort of remote control. If you don’t own…

Filed under:Career DevelopmentEducation & TrainingOpinionRheuminationsSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:Preceptorshipteaching physicians

Drug Commercials—How Are They Still a Thing?

Philip Seo, MD, MHS  |  July 19, 2018

Picture this: It’s 3 o’clock in the morning. You can’t sleep. You settle in front of the television to watch a rerun of Dirty Dancing. And then it hits you: Ask your doctor. Even as your eyelids sag, some part of your primitive forebrain snaps to attention. Medical training has turned us all into multitaskers,…

Filed under:OpinionRheuminationsSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:patient communicationpatient management

Larger Weight Loss Tied to Greater Improvements in Arthritic Knees

Lisa Rapaport  |  June 19, 2018

(Reuters Health)—Obese people with knee osteoarthritis (OA) may find greater symptom relief when they lose larger amounts of weight, a recent study suggests. Researchers examined data on 240 obese adults with pain from knee OA who were participating in an 18-month experiment to see how diet alone or diet plus exercise affected their health. Participants…

Filed under:ConditionsOsteoarthritis and Bone DisordersResearch Rheum Tagged with:Arthritis Care & ResearchkneeKnee Osteoarthritis (OA)knee painObesityPainweight loss

Hip Bone Deterioration May Differ Significantly Between Men & Women

Marilynn Larkin  |  June 12, 2018

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—Various image analysis techniques show sex-specific patterns of bone deterioration at the hip, suggesting that men and women should be assessed differently for hip fracture risk, researchers say. “One major contribution of this work is the integration of data-driven computational anatomy approaches, which showed that proximal femur fragility linked to fracture seems…

Filed under:ConditionsOsteoarthritis and Bone Disorders Tagged with:bone mineral density (BMD)Fractureship fracturehip fracture riskOsteoporosisSex Differences

How Footwear Affects Patients with Medial Knee Osteoarthritis

Carina Stanton  |  May 18, 2018

A patient’s gait, or how they walk, is an important predictor of the biomechanical load distribution that affects osteoarthritis (OA). This understanding comes from a growing body of literature in bio­mechanics to test and treat patients with OA, which takes into account a very practical treatment: a patient’s shoes. A focus on flexible footwear, along…

Filed under:Osteoarthritis and Bone Disorders Tagged with:footwearGait Analysisknee osteoarthritis

New Study Examines the Physical Activity & Joint Symptom Risk

Elizabeth Hofheinz, MPH, MEd  |  April 26, 2018

If you’re a middle-aged woman who makes a New Year’s resolution to work out regularly and you keep that promise for only six months, don’t think that will go far in protecting your joints. Researchers in Australia have homed in on the details of the sustained physical activity required to reduce the risk of joint…

Filed under:Rheumatoid Arthritis Tagged with:BMIHormone Therapyjointsmenopausephysical activity

Retired Rheumatologist Cruises the Globe

Carol Patton  |  April 26, 2018

Several years ago, Ed Herzig, MD, and his wife, Andrea (Andi), spent one week on a Smithsonian cruise that traveled along the western part of the Amazon river, the world’s second longest river, which cuts across seven South American countries. They actually swam in the river, fished for piranha and spotted primitive Peruvian river villages….

Filed under:AudioProfilesRheum After 5 Tagged with:Dr. Ed HerzigProfile

Walk This Way: How Footwear Affects Patients with Medial Knee OA

Carina Stanton  |  April 26, 2018

Studying the way patients with knee osteoarthritis walk and changes to footwear are helping patients under the care of Najia Shakoor, MD, and colleagues take control of their pain and possibly delay disease progression…

Filed under:ConditionsOsteoarthritis and Bone Disorders Tagged with:footwearGait Analysisosteoarthritis (OA)Painwalking

ENDANGART / shutterstock.com

Looking Back on 40 Years with Rheumatoid Arthritis

Sarah Troxell, RN, BSN  |  April 26, 2018

The year was 1978. I was a newly married, 25-year-old registered nurse working on a medical unit at Mercy Medical Center in Oshkosh, Wis. I began to notice morning stiffness, increasing fatigue, and bilateral heel and ankle pain. Every step hurt as I walked down the halls to care for my patients. My diagnosis was…

Filed under:Patient Perspective Tagged with:Rheumatoid arthritisSarah Troxell

Tips for Diagnosing & Treating Shoulder & Low Back Pain

Thomas R. Collins  |  March 17, 2018

SAN DIEGO—At two sports medicine talks at the 2017 ACR/ARHP 2017 Annual Meeting last November, two rheumatologists discussed shoulder impingement and low back pain. First, Andrew Concoff, MD, a rheumatology and sports medicine specialist at St. Jude Medical Center in Fullerton, Calif., gave these five shoulder impingement tips: Physical exams may not be very useful…

Filed under:Meeting ReportsSoft Tissue Pain Tagged with:ACR/ARHP Annual Meetinglow back painshoulder pain

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